While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
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One day he said that he did not think he would bother going to the hospital any more. He reckoned heâd get back to where he was known. Heâd stayed down too long already, and the âstuffâ wouldnât stand it. He was expecting a letter that didnât come. I was away for a couple of days, and when I came back he had been shifted out of the room and had a bed in an angle of the landing on top of the staircase, with the people brushing against him and stumbling over his things all day on their way up and down. I felt indignant, thinking thatâ âthe house being fullâ âthe boss had taken advantage of the bushmanâs helplessness and good nature to put him there. But he said that he was quite comfortable. âI can get a whiff of air here,â he said.
Going in next day I thought for a moment that I had dropped suddenly back into the past and into a bush dance, for there was a concertina going upstairs. He was sitting on the bed, with his legs crossed, and a new cheap concertina on his knee, and his eyes turned to the patch of ceiling as if it were a piece of music and he could read it. âIâm trying to knock a few tunes into my head,â he said, with a brave smile, âin case the worst comes to the worst.â He tried to be cheerful, but seemed worried and anxious. The letter hadnât come. I thought of the many blind musicians in Sydney, and I thought of the bushmanâs chance, standing at a corner swanking a cheap concertina, and I felt sorry for him.
I went out with a vague idea of seeing someone about the matter, and getting something done for the bushmanâ âof bringing a little influence to his assistance; but I suddenly remembered that my clothes were worn out, my hat in a shocking state, my boots burst, and that I owed for a weekâs board and lodging, and was likely to be thrown out at any moment myself; and so I was not in a position to go where there was influence.
When I went back to the restaurant there was a long, gaunt sandy-complexioned bushman sitting by Jackâs side. Jack introduced him as his brother, who had returned unexpectedly to his native district, and had followed him to Sydney. The brother was rather short with me at first, and seemed to regard the restaurant peopleâ âall of us, in factâ âin the light of spielers who wouldnât hesitate to take advantage of Jackâs blindness if he left him a moment; and he looked ready to knock down the first man who stumbled against Jack, or over his luggageâ âbut that soon wore off. Jack was going to stay with Joe at the Coffee Palace for a few weeks, and then go back upcountry, he told me. He was excited and happy. His brotherâs manner towards him was as if Jack had just lost his wife, or boy or someone very dear to him. He would not allow him to do anything for himself, nor try toâ ânot even lace up his boot. He seemed to think that he was thoroughly helpless, and when I saw him pack up Jackâs things, and help him at the table and fix his tie and collar with his great brown hands, which trembled all the time with grief and gentleness, and make Jack sit down on the bed whilst he got a cab and carried the trap down to it, and take him downstairs as if he were made of thin glass, and settle with the landlordâ âthen I knew that Jack was all right.
We had a drink togetherâ âJoe, Jack, the cabman, and I. Joe was very careful to hand Jack the glass, and Jack made joke about it for Joeâs benefit. He swore he could see a glass yet, and Joe laughed, but looked extra troubled the next moment.
I felt their grips on my hand for five minutes after we parted.
Arvie Aspinallâs Alarm ClockIn one of these years a paragraph appeared in a daily paper to the effect that a constable had discovered a little boy asleep on the steps of Grinder Brosâ factory at four oâclock one rainy morning. He awakened him, and demanded an explanation.
The little fellow explained that he worked there, and was frightened of being late; he started work at six, and was apparently greatly astonished to hear that it was only four. The constable examined a small parcel which the frightened child had in his hand. It contained a clean apron and three slices of bread and treacle.
The child further explained that he woke up and thought it was late, and didnât like to wake mother and ask her the time âbecause sheâd been washinâ.â He didnât look at the clock, because they âdidnât have one.â He volunteered no explanations as to how he expected mother to know the time, but, perhaps, like many other mites of his kind, he had unbounded faith in the infinitude of a motherâs wisdom. His name was Arvie Aspinall, please sir, and he lived in Jonesâs Alley. Father was dead.
A few days later the same paper took great pleasure in stating, in reference to that âTouching Incidentâ noticed in a recent issue, that a benevolent society lady had started a subscription among her friends with the object of purchasing an alarm-clock for the little boy found asleep at Grinder Brosâ workshop door.
Later on, it was mentioned, in connection with the touching incident, that the alarm-clock had been bought and delivered to the boyâs mother, who appeared to be quite overcome with gratitude. It was learned, also, from another source, that the last assertion was greatly exaggerated.
The touching incident was worn out in another paragraph, which left no doubt that the benevolent society lady was none other than
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